Invisible FX: Difference between revisions
From ACT Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson (Create page. Source - Barclays Bank - https://wiki.treasurers.org/w/index.php?title=Trumponomics&action=edit) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Mend link.) |
||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
==External link== | ==External link== | ||
*[https:// | *[https://www.barclayscorporate.com/insights/fx/invisible-fx/ Barclays Bank - Invisible FX] | ||
[[Category:Cash_management]] | [[Category:Cash_management]] | ||
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]] | [[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]] | ||
[[Category:Liquidity_management]] | [[Category:Liquidity_management]] |
Revision as of 20:43, 21 March 2022
Foreign exchange - pricing.
Abbreviation for invisible FX transactions.
In the organisational context, invisible FX transactions are low-value FX transactions that are not visible to the organisation before committing to pricing.
- How to improve FX pricing
- "Most corporate treasuries have done a good job of eliminating the margins on high-value cross-currency payments through the use of ECNs, FX platforms and shopping around key FX players.
- They tend to have a minimum threshold, say £100k, above which cross-currency payments are considered a 'trade' and are booked via the central treasury team.
- However, cross-currency payments below that threshold, usually low-value but high volume, often fall into the 'black hole' in terms of price transparency – the ‘invisible FX’."
- Invisible FX - Barclays Bank.
See also
- Counterparty
- Electronic communication network (ECN)
- Execution
- Foreign exchange (FX)
- Platform
- Price transparency
- Transparency